Conspiracy

Australia was rocked in 1978 by the explosion of a massive bomb placed in a rubbish bin outside the Sydney Hilton Hotel. Conspiracy is a dramatic reinvestigation of this unsolved crime.

On the 13 February 1978 at 12:40 am, a massive bomb which had been placed in the rubbish bin outside the Sydney Hilton Hotel in George Street exploded, devastating a whole city block. Three people were killed and seven seriously injured. The noise of the explosion could be heard as far way as Bondi Beach.

At the time, the Australian Prime Minister and eleven visiting heads of state as part of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Regional Meeting were resident in the hotel. From the beginning the police believed it was a terrorist conspiracy, claiming the Ananda Marga religious sect was responsible.

But for ten years, no person or group claimed responsibility and the police, by their own admission, could find no evidence nor question anybody. At the same time, former police constable Terry Griffiths, a victim of the bomb blast, campaigned for a full and open inquiry. While recovering from his horrific injuries, Griffiths received information which alleged it was the security forces themselves who were responsible for the blast, part of a sinister official conspiracy.

Through a series of stylised re-enactments and studio interviews Conspiracy tells the gripping and dramatic story of the Sydney Hilton Hotel bombing.

A huge security operation had been mounted for what was the first Commonwealth Heads of Government Regional Meeting: yet the bombers somehow slipped through the cordon. Was the bomb itself made in a commonwealth government laboratory? Was a bomb disposal unit waiting nearby as part of a pre-arranged plan? Why were the Army bomb sniffer dogs called off just a few days before? Was there a police observation vehicle watching the hotel and did someone from that vehicle make the bomb warning call? Why were almost all of the bomb fragments simply swept up and thrown away? And why was a rubbish bin in a high security area left unchecked and unguarded?

It is many years since these questions were first raised. Now they are being asked in Federal Parliament.